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Farmers all over America are on edge right now, and I certainly can't blame them. The war in the Middle East has created a fertilizer crisis at the worst time possible. As you will see below, if nitrogen fertilizer is not applied to wheat, corn and rice at the proper time, there is no hope of recovery later. Since it does not appear that the Strait of Hormuz will be reopened any time soon, there will be serious crop losses in the United States, and in poorer countries throughout the world it will be even worse.
Meanwhile, most of the country is experiencing at least some level of drought right now. If you check out the latest map from the U.S. Drought Monitor, it looks like a horror show. Even if there was no war going on in the Middle East, farmers in the U.S. would still be facing a nightmarish drought that never seems to end.
In Colorado, one family that had planned to go skiing during spring break decided to go to the beach instead because of the extremely dry conditions…
Stretching out in their beach chairs as the temperature climbed toward 70 degrees, Seth and Renee McLaughlin watched their three kids play in the sand on what was supposed to be a family ski trip.
Booked last November, their spring break vacation to Colorado's mountains required a hard shift in plans following a historically warm and dry winter: Instead of zipping down the slopes, the couple watched their kids sift sand into colorful toy buckets on the shores of Lake Dillon.
"It's obviously frustrating. You want to go skiing, and usually we ski until May, and instead we're at the beach," said Seth McLaughlin, 44, a nonprofit consultant. "I feel bad for the folks who spent tens of thousands of dollars to come on vacation here."
There has been so little snow in most of the western half of the nation this winter.
Snowpack levels are historically low, and that means that a very rough summer is ahead.
We are only in March, and we are already seeing severe water restrictions being imposed.
For example, restaurants in Denver are forbidden from serving water unless customers specifically ask for it…
Restaurants in Colorado's capital are only allowed to serve water to guests if they ask, according to new restrictions by the Denver Board of Water Commissioners.